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Dinoflagellata for #TinyTuesday! Kofoid & Swezy's 1921 book "The Free-Living Unarmored Dinoflagellata" describes dinoflagellates collected around southern CA in 1906 & 1917. Contributed to #BHLib by @uoftlibraries @GersteinLibrary https://t.co/MXU6lD0dmt #protist
Explore beautiful #fungi in Nees von Esenbeck's "Das system der pilze und schwämme" (1816-17). Contributed to #BHLib by @IllinoisLibrary @illinoisbiolib: https://t.co/lJoyzBjjXW #mycology
Vogel's "Chronologischer Raupenkalender" (1837) provides a calendar of which caterpillars appear each month along with instructions on how to rear #caterpillars and catch #butterflies. View it for free in #BHLib via @SILibraries https://t.co/yxNJM7DX3z
#Basilisk (Basiliscus basiliscus). #SciArt from Leopold Joseph Fitzinger, Bilder-Atlas zur wissenschaftlich-populären Naturgeschichte der Wirbelthiere (1867). Contributed to #BHLib by the @mayrlibrary: https://t.co/BQxgguSusI -- #reptiles #lizards #herpetology
For #BotanicMonday, we're featuring #orchid #SciArt with chromolithographs of paintings by the Swiss botanical artist, Émilie Vouga, published as "Les Orchidées" around 1890. Explore all 6 prints in #BHLib via @chicagobotanic: https://t.co/zFSYz8f3S1
John Martyn's "Historia plantarum rariorum" (1728-[1737]) was the first flower book to be printed in color. It was devoted to new species growing at the Chelsea Physic Garden and the Cambridge Botanic Garden. View it in #BHLib via @NYBG: https://t.co/geEEQKeu2i #FloraFriday
Happy #FloraFriday! Though unsigned, the majority of the engravings in "Fragmenta Botanica" (1809) (depicting recent arrivals to the Schönbrunn gardens) are likely the work of J. Scharf, M. Sedelmayer & J. Knapp. View it in #BHLib via @mobotgarden: https://t.co/R41wgHR1Zk
Happy #Feathursday! Pine Grosbeaks (Pinicola enucleator). #SciArt by Archibald Thorburn for Thomas Lilford, Coloured Figures of the Birds of the British Islands, Vol. 4 (1885-97). Contributed for digitization by the Research Library of the @AMNH: https://t.co/ERlu9Pt3Fs
McIntosh's "A monograph of British Marine Annelids" was published over a 50 year period (1873-1923). McIntosh's sister Roberta & Ada H. Walker produced most of the #SciArt for the work. View it in #BHLib via @SILibraries: https://t.co/abTfQfmGlh #WormWednesday
Russian entomologist G.G. Iakobson devoted his career to studying the systematics & classification of #insects. His catalog on the #beetles of Russia & western Europe was published in 13 pts. from 1905-1915. View it in #BHLib via @NHM_Library https://t.co/dr5JUloozk #scicomm